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1 row where comments = 13, "created_at" is on date 2021-02-27 and state = "open" sorted by updated_at descending
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id | node_id | number | title | user | state | locked | assignee | milestone | comments | created_at | updated_at ▲ | closed_at | author_association | pull_request | body | repo | type | active_lock_reason | performed_via_github_app | reactions | draft | state_reason |
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817989436 | MDU6SXNzdWU4MTc5ODk0MzY= | 242 | Async support | eyeseast 25778 | open | 0 | 13 | 2021-02-27T18:29:38Z | 2021-10-28T14:37:56Z | CONTRIBUTOR | Following our conversation last week, want to note this here before I forget. I've had a couple situations where I'd like to do a bunch of updates in an async event loop, but I run into SQLite's issues with concurrent writes. This feels like something sqlite-utils could help with. PeeWee ORM has a SQLite write queue that might be a good model. It's using threads or gevent, but I think that approach would translate well enough to asyncio. Happy to help with this, too. |
sqlite-utils 140912432 | issue | { "url": "https://api.github.com/repos/simonw/sqlite-utils/issues/242/reactions", "total_count": 0, "+1": 0, "-1": 0, "laugh": 0, "hooray": 0, "confused": 0, "heart": 0, "rocket": 0, "eyes": 0 } |
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CREATE TABLE [issues] ( [id] INTEGER PRIMARY KEY, [node_id] TEXT, [number] INTEGER, [title] TEXT, [user] INTEGER REFERENCES [users]([id]), [state] TEXT, [locked] INTEGER, [assignee] INTEGER REFERENCES [users]([id]), [milestone] INTEGER REFERENCES [milestones]([id]), [comments] INTEGER, [created_at] TEXT, [updated_at] TEXT, [closed_at] TEXT, [author_association] TEXT, [pull_request] TEXT, [body] TEXT, [repo] INTEGER REFERENCES [repos]([id]), [type] TEXT , [active_lock_reason] TEXT, [performed_via_github_app] TEXT, [reactions] TEXT, [draft] INTEGER, [state_reason] TEXT); CREATE INDEX [idx_issues_repo] ON [issues] ([repo]); CREATE INDEX [idx_issues_milestone] ON [issues] ([milestone]); CREATE INDEX [idx_issues_assignee] ON [issues] ([assignee]); CREATE INDEX [idx_issues_user] ON [issues] ([user]);